A front-page headline on the print edition of USA Today that landed in my driveway earlier this week grabbed my attention:

Guns are a 'way of life' in Texas

Yep.

Can't dispute that.

As a native Texan whose brother carries his concealed handgun into his Fort Worth-area church building each Sunday morning, I understand just how much many Lone Star State residents value their firearms.

But he'll tell you that nothing repels true evil like a well-placed, loaded Glock .40-caliber pistol.

Now, at this point in the story, I'm ready for a direct quote. I want the pastor to tell me, in his own words, what he believes about guns and evils. Instead, the piece relies on paraphrasing until finally providing a short direct quote five paragraphs in:

McAbee, known around town as the "Pistol-Packing Preacher," keeps his loaded Glock in a holster tucked in his pants at all times, whether making a bank deposit or preaching from the pulpit of the Lighthouse Worship Center, an Assembly of God church where he pastors.

When not preaching, McAbee offers a $50 one-day concealed weapons course to gun enthusiasts. Since the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in December, when a 20-year-old man shot and killed 20 students and six staffers before shooting himself, he's offered the classes for free to teachers.

It's the Texas way, McAbee, 36, says. "We believe an armed society is a peaceful society. This is Texas, and everybody has a gun."

Then the relatively in-depth story quickly veers off in a different direction — a whole lot of different directions, actually. McAbee isn't seen or heard from again until the very end:

In Beaumont, Pastor McAbee, who has been giving concealed weapons classes for more than a year, says he's reaching out to area teachers so they'll be ready if the local districts allow firearms on campus.

After Sandy Hook, he posted a note on Facebook offering the free classes. On a recent Saturday, he trained 150 teachers; an additional 200 have signed up for his next class in March.

The firearm training doesn't conflict with the church doctrine he lives by, he says.

"I preach peace," McAbee says. "Having a firearm keeps the peace."

There you have it. Not a lot of meat in USA Today's coverage of McAbee or actual insight into his religious beliefs or church doctrine. Just a not-so-filling glob of cotton-candy journalism.